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According to the battles of Cobra, a gathering of government politicians and nation men, who during the crisis and the political unrest in Britain, give a valiant effort to make all the difference, as they attempt to race against time to reestablish harmony the nation over to spare it from obliteration, what challenges them.
It's fine for the first couple of episodes, which I found I couldn't stop watching because of the sheer torque of any drama that combines this cast with a national disaster, a personal tragedy and a secret fling.
Nevertheless, even though everything moves swiftly indoors, there's enough cash down the back of the sofa for handsome backdrops of Downing Street, Whitehall, an empty London - and, crucially, for a fine cast.
No-one watches disaster thrillers for the dialogue. They are supposed to be cheesy and overblown. What we are here for is the "what if" and the spectacle, and COBRA looks like it will deliver on both fronts.
As the characters assert themselves, the show exerts a surprisingly tight grip on the viewer's attention, thanks primarily to its gleefully jaundiced portrait of backroom political machinations.